TY - JOUR
T1 - How Rousseau read Hume’s Political Discourses
T2 - hints of unexpected agreement in their views of money and luxury
AU - Susato, Ryu
N1 - Funding Information:
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [grant number (C): 26380264]. A part of this paper, in its early version, was read under the title of ‘Two Epicureans in the Age of Enlightenment: Hume and Rousseau on Luxury and Happiness’ at the 29th ECSSS (Eighteenth Scottish Studies Society) and the 47th ASECS (American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies) Joint Annual Meeting on March 2016. The outline of this paper was also presented at the Applied Economics Workshop in Keio University on May 2017. I appreciate the chairpersons and all the participants for useful comments at both events. I am also grateful to Professor Claire Pignol, and the three anonymous referees for their constructive suggestions.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018, © 2018 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2019/1/2
Y1 - 2019/1/2
N2 - Despite mounting scholarship on the Rousseau–Smith connection, the possibility of overlap between the Humean and Rousseauian views of commercial society has not been explored. This is due to opposing views held by these two thinkers on this issue. However, Rousseau in the Confessions recorded a brief, but shrewd impressions on Hume’s Political Discourses, which he held before meeting Hume. In these comments, Rousseau, unlike his other French contemporaries, noted some republican aspects lurking in Hume’s political and economic essays. Moreover, after his two Discourses, Rousseau composed several other important works in which he revealed his more ‘mature’ economic arguments. Careful readings of these textual clues indicate that, in striking parallel with Hume, Rousseau conducts a thought experiment on the drastic change in the quantity of money and elaborates on the significance of industry and a certain type of luxury. Our purpose here is not to prove that Hume’s Political Discourses directly influenced Rousseau’s later writings, but to measure the extent to which Rousseau could share the Scot’s economic ideas by considering that the former may well have read the latter.
AB - Despite mounting scholarship on the Rousseau–Smith connection, the possibility of overlap between the Humean and Rousseauian views of commercial society has not been explored. This is due to opposing views held by these two thinkers on this issue. However, Rousseau in the Confessions recorded a brief, but shrewd impressions on Hume’s Political Discourses, which he held before meeting Hume. In these comments, Rousseau, unlike his other French contemporaries, noted some republican aspects lurking in Hume’s political and economic essays. Moreover, after his two Discourses, Rousseau composed several other important works in which he revealed his more ‘mature’ economic arguments. Careful readings of these textual clues indicate that, in striking parallel with Hume, Rousseau conducts a thought experiment on the drastic change in the quantity of money and elaborates on the significance of industry and a certain type of luxury. Our purpose here is not to prove that Hume’s Political Discourses directly influenced Rousseau’s later writings, but to measure the extent to which Rousseau could share the Scot’s economic ideas by considering that the former may well have read the latter.
KW - Luxury
KW - enlightenment
KW - quantity theory of money
KW - republicanism
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U2 - 10.1080/09672567.2018.1499788
DO - 10.1080/09672567.2018.1499788
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85053661894
SN - 0967-2567
VL - 26
SP - 23
EP - 50
JO - European Journal of the History of Economic Thought
JF - European Journal of the History of Economic Thought
IS - 1
ER -